Chediak-Higashi syndrome

Definition

Chediak-Higashi syndrome (CHS) is a very rare disease that affects almost every organ in the body. It is an autosomal recessive disease that results from an abnormality in lysosomes (a sac-like container of enzymes) that travel within cells. The problems that occur with this disease are quite varied and present in two stages.

Description

Chediak-Higashi syndrome was named for the two scientists who, in 1957, further detailed the disorder first described by a Cuban doctor in 1943. The disease progresses through two different stages: the "stable phase" and the "accelerated phase." This rare disease has both classic external signs and distinct cellular problems that always result in a fatal outcome.

Affected individuals have many kinds of immune system problems, making them more likely to get infections and cell proliferation problems. People with CHS have a lowered ability to target infectious organisms, and once their immune cells do become involved, they have a harder time killing the infectious organisms.

Affected individuals also have problems with their melanocytes, the cells that produce melanin, the compound that gives skin, hair, and eyes their color. Often, this can result in signs of albinism (lack of color in the skin, hair, and eyes).

Genetic profile

Chediak-Higashi is an autosomal recessive disease, which requires both parents to be carriers of altered, or mutated, genes. CHS often occurs in families with a history of marrying close relatives. Based on genetic mapping that was first done in a mouse model of Chediak-Higashi syndrome, a mutated gene found on chromosome 1q is thought to be the cause of the disease. This gene is called LYST.

Genetic tests of many different affected people with the disease have revealed strong signs of allelic variability (different mutations in the same gene). Some evidence suggests that the allelic variability accounts for the many different presentations of the disease, such as differing age of presentation, differences in the severity of symptoms, and different progression into the second stage of the disease.

Demographics

About 200 cases of CHS have been described in the world's literature. It is seen in the same number of males and females. Often there is a history of intermarriage.


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